This freezes the enemy rally cars. Useful for learning stage layouts without pressure, but boring for actual racing.
The sim racing community is split on trainers.
The Purist’s View:
"Rally is about adversity. Managing engine wear, broken headlights, and punctures is the entire point. Using a trainer to remove damage is like playing God of War with infinite health. You lose the adrenaline."
The Pragmatist’s View:
"I work 50 hours a week. I want to drive a Audi Quattro S1 E2 on snowy Monte Carlo without unlocking it via 12 hours of grinding. As long as I don't upload a fake leaderboard time, I am hurting nobody."
The Verdict: If you use a WRC Generations trainer solely to skip the grind and practice line memorization, you are fine. If you use it to fake your way onto the global top 10, expect the community to hunt you down. wrc generations trainer
When searching for a WRC Generations trainer, you will encounter several versions. Here are the features that actually work in the latest patch (v1.4.0+ as of this writing):
The holy grail. This prevents visual and mechanical damage. You can roll your Ford Puma down a cliff in Chile and drive away with pristine tires. Caveat: Does not prevent "soft lock" if you flip upside down with no reset timer. This freezes the enemy rally cars
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